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The Science of Homeopathy – page 29

insanity.

Finally, let us consider the basic sources of mental and emotional suffering which enable the initiation of psychosomatic illness in the first place. Psychosomatic perspectives have practically become a modern fad. We are aware, as are all modern physicians, that disturb- ing thoughts or feelings can disrupt very deeply the health of a person. A sudden grief, a sudden fear, a sudden communication of bad news can throw the organism into extreme suffering that can unbalance the organism for the rest of its life. Why is it that some people can experi- ence such shock for a brief time, but others degenerate into a chronic and deteriorating state of health? What are the qualities on the mental level which lead to this difference in susceptibility?

If we meditate upon the source of mental or emotional suffering, it gradually becomes clear that such suffering arises from two basic sources: broken ambitions and broken attachments. These in turn are another way of saying selfishness and acquisitiveness.

Anyone who believes strongly in many selfish ambitions is setting himself up for a lot of suffering. As soon as it becomes clear that an overly inflated ambition is unreachable, the person will experience grief proportional to the degree of his original belief in it. The same applies to a person driven by acquisitiveness. The degree of suffering resulting from loss of a possession is proportional to the degree of at- tachment to that possession.

Thus, the conclusion can be drawn that if a person wishes to avoid mental and emotional suffering, he should cultivate selfless, humble, and altruistic qualities. This does not mean, however, that a person should become ascetic, refusing to meet the necessary needs required by every individual. The best policy to follow for maximizing health is “the way of the golden mean” of the ancient Greeks: neither too much nor too little. No excess. Such moderation applies equally to all three levels of human existence.

 

Emotional Plane

 

The level of human existence of next importance to the mental level is the emotional level. By this, we include all grades and shades of emotions from the most primitive to the most sublime. This level of existence acts as the defense mechanism’s receptor of emotional stimuli from the environment, and also functions as the vehicle of ex- pression for feelings, actions, and emotional disturbances occurring in the individual. The following is a definition of the emotional plane of existence: that level of human existence which registers changes in